Lawmakers push of offshore exploration

MISSISSIPPI GULF COAST — U.S. Senators Thad Cochran (R-Miss.) and Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) are among a bipartisan group of Senators who are encouraging the completion of a plan authorizing increased offshore oil and gas leasing in the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS), including the Central Gulf of Mexico that covers Mississippi.

“Greater energy development in the Gulf of Mexico makes sense on many levels, including improving American energy and economic security,” Cochran said. “Technology has advanced to a point where tapping our oil and natural gas reserves in the Gulf can be done in deeper waters with greater efficiency and environmental safety. My colleagues and I believe the planning process for 2010 to 2015 should be completed as expeditiously as possible.”

The DPP, developed by the Mineral Management Service, would set the perimeters for oil and gas lease sales within the 26 different OCS planning areas, including the Central Gulf of Mexico area that includes the coasts of Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama.

The DPP is part of an ongoing process within the Department of the Interior to set an OCS energy exploration and production policy. As part of that process, states, organizations and individuals are invited to offer input on the proposal, including issues related to offshore buffers to restrict development.

“Implementing a sensible, forward-thinking energy policy will allow for responsible leasing and development of America’s energy resources and will help industries and businesses here at home that rely heavily on natural gas and crude oil. It will also further our national security and energy security interests and, of course, spur jobs and economic growth as we open new areas to leasing and development,” the senators’ letter to Salazar states. “We believe that the DPP is an important step in creating a robust, diverse national energy policy which will help secure our energy future. We urge you to move forward on the DPP as you work to finalize a new five-year OCS plan.”